Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Thank You and Goodnight...


If we don't change, we don't grow.
If we don't grow, we aren't really living.
-GAIL SHEEHY-

So an Anonymous, But Fairly Nice Person just posted a very fair question to my blog.

"So this blog is pretty much dead, right?" they asked.

And it occurs to me that this person deserves a thoughtful response. If only because there's a single person out there who enjoyed what I put here, I genuinely appreciate that. I don't know. Maybe there's more of you lurking out there in the shadows, who might similarly wonder why I'm so silent. I thought a formal response might be in order.

Without making any sort of formal decision, I've decided to retire this blog. A couple of different factors have all come together to make this an inevitable decision. And a single inciting incident put it all into a clear perspective for me. I feel that this decision is inevitable.

Here's why I've decided to close the doors here...

First, I've undergone a bit of a job change. Working at the theater produces a different work-load for me, than previous jobs. When I first started this blog, I was working at a housing firm and I could spare an hour or so, a day, to write out a long, lengthy blog post. Something worth reading. I started THIS job in October, 2007 and initially I was sequestered downstairs, alone with my good friend, Jenn Kincaid. That allowed me some time to blog an occasional entry or two. But when, in August of last year, I got moved upstairs, right outside my bosses office, the end was in sight. It's difficult to produce a coherent thought when my old boss is around, much less produce any written work of any value.

Backstage, here at the blog, I probably have three dozen unfinished blog entries from August to now. I would start an entry, get three paragraphs in and then get pulled away by the work, unable to return. Those entries will just live backstage, never to see the light of day.

And it made it pretty clear that office hours are not good hours for blogging anymore.

Second, I originally began this blog as a response to a social change at my favorite social networking site, CIN. An online discussion forum for Chicago improvisers. A place where all of my favorite people met up to make jokes, post funny pictures and explore extended, online bits. Good times.

But then, some real douchebags in the improv community took over and made it clear that I (and a few others) were not welcome there and I decided to leave that board, rather than stick around and wait to be tossed out, publicly.

So, I started a blog. To have a creative outlet. And as a place to record the memories of my life here and my childhood, that I feared that I would lose to time. Of course, the more I wrote, the more I wanted to explore other things. I had a t-shirt contest once. I played elaborate jokes on people. I treated the blog like a newsletter about me, published for free, to anyone who wanted to read it.

And generally speaking, it was no holds barred. Everything was up for discussion. My past. My mistakes. My anxieties. My plans. My sexuality. My friends. Everything was open for discussion. With one caveat, I tried to keep my current romantic relationships down to a minimum. Girlfriends would feature in an entry, but they were participants in an adventure and less deconstructions of my actual relationships. Well, that was my intention, anyways. I can see that I didn't exactly manage to avoid it, all the time.

But with the addition of Facebook, I have a community of friends to interact with again. CIN, for all intents and purposes, is dead. The douchebags all fled in a single move and then a new crop of posters popped up and I think for some of us old-timers, it was a little depressing to hear the same old questions asked over and over again. And to notice the slow, quiet silence of old friends who didn't visit the boards anymore. As it turns out, all of those old friends are on the Facebook (in some capacity) so that's a good place for me to visit with them.

CIN no longer serves any function.
In the same way, my blog is less necessary as a refuge.

One more thing happened here, that is worth mentioning. I think it's relevant to my decision to close the doors here.

In late January of this year, oh, a month and a half ago, now, I had a really bad birthday. By sheer bad luck, the people that I am closest with were almost entirely unavailable. (Not everyone. I had a few close friends out for my birthday.) Let's just say that there were some faces that I was missing.

And there was a girl that I fancied a bit and that pretty much fell apart, right in front of my eyes, at the party.

And there was another girl that I had no interest in, whatsoever, who waited until I was too drunk to defend myself, before shoving her hands down my pants and molesting me.

And my solution to this terrible set of unfortunate circumstances, was the exactly wrong one. I walked calmly up to the bartender and asked him to knock me unconscious with booze. He obliged me. I even took the rare opportunity to allow my deejay to smoke weed with me, outside. So, I was functionally retarded, by the time I left the bar. Drunk, high, being molested by the exactly wrong person and feeling terribly, terribly lonely.

When I got home, it got worse. Joe was away at his fiance's apartment, as he is most nights now. The dog was happy to see me and that was a small comfort. I got home and I changed into my pajamas and went out on the couch to sit down, a whirlwind of self-destructive thoughts raging in my head. I sat down calmly on the couch and had myself a little bit of a breakdown.

I started crying a little bit.
And then I cried a lot.
And then the floodgates opened and I fell over into a fetal position and openly wept.

I questioned everything. I analyzed all of my recent decisions. I questioned all of my big life choices too. Who I was. How I got there. Where I was going. What I'd done wrong. I focused pretty hard on what I'd done wrong. In fact, I would say that was a central theme of the whole meltdown - the things I'd done wrong in my life.

Believe it or not, this stupid, silly little blog was a part of all of that. I felt ashamed that I thought that this blog was anything of value. I felt embarrassed that I'd ever opened up the doors for the general public to view it. It felt like the ridiculous and pathetic height of hubris to assume that I had anything of value to say and even worse, the tone-deaf expectation that anyone would want to hear what I had to say.

I mean, who does this? Who lives their lives so publicly? Who enforces such an artificial audience/ performer relationship on the people in their lives?

It just seemed to shallow and so vain and absolutely unforgivable.

To be clear, at the same time that I was questioning the purpose for this blog, I also decided that I had shamed my mother and that she probably only pretended to love and support me, when she really would like for me to just act like a normal person for once. So, I might've been trolling around off the deep end, a little bit there.

I cried myself to sleep on the couch. Alone in a ramshackle apartment that I hate. Surrounded by a larger city that I love. But as isolated as any man could feel.

The next morning, the hangover eventually went away, but the questions I asked myself stuck around. And I knew, without absolute certainty, that this was a dying proposition. I was probably going to end this blog, some time soon.

I was at the end of this two year experiment.

Some very good friends, Ian, Crescent, Kyle, Paul and Todd have expressed a genuine interest in this blog and what I have to say. For them, I tried to bake up a few verbal pies, between the end of January and now. But let's face it, they weren't very good. To them, and to anyone else out there that I don't know about, I encourage you to open other doors of communication with me. Come and participate with me in the half-hoakum stories that you read about here for a short time. There is always a place at my table for anyone who wants one. In any social setting. You're always welcome. (Even if you shove your hands down my pants when I'm too drunk to defend myself. Strike that, especially when you shove your hands down my pants when I'm too drunk to defend myself.)

I can feel myself standing on the edge of making some big decisions for myself. I am coming up on 9 years of being in Chicago. I feel like there are things here that I've not pursued, that I genuinely want. I feel like I am running out of time. I feel like I better get a move on, if I want to get things done. I feel like I am on the threshold of living somewhere else now, even if I don't know where that somewhere else is, just yet.

I also feel like this dumb zombie musical, might be my swan song. The last thing I direct or produce for a good while. I am enjoying the whole process, but there seems to be an imperceptible air of finality about this project. So, I'm accepting that and working with the assumption that there are other things for me, beyond this. Perhaps just not in the theatrical arts. The unforeseen challenges will be undertaken privately, without public documentation. Some of you will know well about them, because you'll likely be directly involved.

I guess this is the end bit here. Where I end things out.

Please allow me to thank you, whoever you are, wherever you are, for the times that you checked in here and read my dumb blog posts. Thank you for the very funny, kind responses. Thank you for playing along with me and humoring me, when necessary. And thank you for the lovely, private ways that you shared your lives with me. Sincerely, thank you.

So, leave a comment or two if you fancy it, close your web browser and let's meet up at the bar some time to share a laugh or two.

It will be good to talk about what I'm up to without two or three people saying, "We know this already. We read your blog."

It will be good to focus on living life, as it happens. Without partially checking out to make mental notes of a record that I want to eventually make of the event.

It will be good.

Cheers,
COB

"So goodnight, boys, goodnight!"
-The Decemberists-
-Shanty for the Arethusa.-


17 comments:

Becca said...

COB, I've been lurking on your blog for...I don't know how long. I like it, and I'm sorry to see you're shutting down. BUT I do want to come see SFS sometime soon, and when that happens, we will catch up over a beer at TH, yes?
Good luck to you, sir. Big hugs.

Mr. B said...

Hello Rebecca,

Catching up over a beer, at any time, sounds lovely. Any time.

All My Best,
COB

Ted Hobgood said...

I, for one, will miss the blog. I do realize it can be frustrating to throw words out there and rarely get any words back. Hope things go better on Facebook for you. We should be friends or something. (I'm not a big Facebooker, as he flow of information gets a bit overloaded there for me, but it's always nice to have new ways to keep in touch.)

Sorry to hear about the dark days. That's got to be rough. I had a similar experience on my last birthday, with similar results, so I feel for ya, buddy.

Vaya con information highway.

Anonymous said...

This blog will be missed.

Alibear said...

You know I've always been a great fan of your blog, Mr. B. I will miss it and the antics you talk about on here. I do, however, have to mention that I'm proud of you for doing whatever it is you feel is necessary for YOU. Sometimes, you don't put yourself first. I'm glad you're doing that in whatever capacity it seems fit. Will i miss this blog? Hells yeah. But I'm here to support you no matter what.

Love you.
Alibear

Kyle said...

Chin up, deep breath and move forward my friend. We'll get a drink and talk things over soon. You'll find a way to put the dark days behind you and at some point you look back and laugh.

Talk soon,
Kyle

P.S. My broke ass is all about drinking at home these days and you're always welcome to come over.

Wolter said...

I will miss this blog too. I have been remiss in both reading other blogs and writing my own blog of late, but I was always a fan.

But I am more than willing to rectify the lack of blog posts with the addition of beer.

Badger said...

Chris, I like your blog. I don't cruise it EVERYDAY but I do check and have found it to be well written and fun.

Might I suggest just leaving it? That way if you find something to write about it's still here.

And as for your B-Day darkness. I just want you to know you are one of my first friends in Chicago and I am very happy to have met you.

Cheers friend!
-Alan

Anonymous said...

Well, I can understand why you probably want to close this shop down and move on, but I really hope you'll reconsider.

Sure, it probably wouldn't ever be the same, but I've told you that I think you probably are over-examining your birthday party debacle. And I think you ARE moving forward... you had that gig in Chinatown, you had that gig with the vaudeville show, you've got a show opening that you wrote... all good things.

Anything that did happen was supposed to happen. Anything that didn't, wasn't. Anything that will, will.

Just smile and breathe and stay positive.

Lemme know if I can help.

Mr. B said...

Ah, you're all the grandest of people. I really do love each and every one of you for the very kind support that you're offering here.

Just to clarify a few things that I might not've been clear about in my post...

I won't be deleting this blog or closing it or anything silly like that. I just probably won't be posting on it with any regularity or maybe not at all. Things have changed for me sufficiently that my original motivation is not there to continue this project and my job makes that nearly impossible. All the dumb posts that preceded this one will still be here, if you need to see them for some reason.

As bad as all of that birthday business was, I'm really not in a dark mood, anymore. No need to be on alert or intervene for me or anything like that. I'm fine and happy and all is good.

Saying that I feel like I'm on the verge of a big decision isn't a scary thing for me. It's a hopeful and optimistic one. So, don't let that tale of misery and woe color everything about it. It was a bad night, that taught me a few lessons, one of which is... I am a former blogger.

But you're all the best people, really, and I adore each of you for the kind words that you posted here. Really, I do.

Cheers,
COB

Anonymous said...

Mr. B,

I am going to dearly miss this blog. It has been such a comfort to me these past few years, reading about your memories and adventures and struggles. I'm on The FB too, but I felt your entries here were so personal and that I could take my time reading them. I do not feel the same about the Frenetic FB.

BTW, I'll be doing some early birthday celebrating in your neck of the woods tonight. Stop by for a drink or an inappropriate grope (I hear that's your new thing these days).

~LaLa

Anonymous said...

I don't buy it. this blog has always been your catharsis, creative outlet and connection with people who have busy lives too.

don't shut down that side of yourself.

on the other hand, "you dont have to stay anywhere forever."

Anonymous said...

End of an era.

People are talking about endings a lot more these days. It's something worth doing well, just as well as the beginning parts.

You know how to reach me. That gyro omelet ain't gonna eat itself.

Anonymous said...

Seconding pretty much everything my better half said, including the open invite. The weather is getting better--time to start grilling!

(I've always enjoyed your writing, so I'll definitely miss it, but I also think your reasoning is sound. When it's time to move on, it's time to move on.)

Chip said...

Too...much...sentiment...

Can't...break...free...

I'll still see ya around, ya big lug. ;)

-Chip

Anonymous said...

I will miss your blog A LOT!

You don't have to blog about things for me to say "I know this already"... For you already would have told me!

I hear that Brook used to work at this coffee shop up here...

-kgb

Anonymous said...

Does this mean you're going to quit sucking so much dick?

You shouldn't have to give up the thing you love the most...